Table Of Contents

System Message Overview

This guide describes the Catalyst 3750 Metro-specific system messages. During operation, the system software sends these messages to the console (and, optionally, to a logging server on another system). Not all system messages mean problems with your system. Some messages are informational, and others can help diagnose problems with communications lines, internal hardware, or the system software.

Note For information about system messages that are not Catalyst 3750 Metro-specific, see the Cisco IOS System Error Messages, Cisco IOS Release 12.2.

By default, a switch sends the output from system messages to a logging process.

Each system message begins with a percent sign (%) and is structured as follows:

%FACILITY-SEVERITY-MNEMONIC: Message-text

•FACILITY is a two or more uppercase letters that show the facility to which the message refers. A facility can be a hardware device, a protocol, or a module of the system software. Table 1-1 lists Catalyst 3750-specific facility codes.

•SEVERITY is a single-digit code from 0 to 7 that reflects the severity of the condition. The lower the number, the more serious the situation. Table 1-2 lists the message severity levels.

Table 1-2 Message Severity Levels

Severity Level

Description

0 - emergency

System is unusable.

1 - alert

Immediate action required.

2 - critical

Critical condition.

3 - error

Error condition.

4 - warning

Warning condition.

5 - notification

Normal but significant condition.

6 - informational

Informational message only.

7 - debugging

Message that appears during debugging only.

•MNEMONIC is a code that uniquely identifies the message.

•Message-text is a text string describing the condition. This portion of the message sometimes contains detailed information about the event, including terminal port numbers, network addresses, or addresses that correspond to locations in the system memory address space. Because the information in these variable fields changes from message to message, it is represented here by short strings enclosed in square brackets ([ ]). A decimal number, for example, is represented as [dec]. Table 1-3 lists the variable fields in messages.

Table 1-3 Variable Fields

Representation

Type of Information

[dec]

Decimal integer

[char]

Single character

[chars]

Character string

[enet]

Ethernet address (for example, 0000.FEED.00C0)

[hex]

Hexadecimal integer

[inet]

Internet address

This example shows a partial switch system message:

00:00:46: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Port-channel1, changed state to up

00:00:47: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface GigabitEthernet1/0/1, changed state to up

00:00:47: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface GigabitEthernet1/0/2, changed state to up

00:00:48: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Vlan1, changed state to down

00:00:48: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface GigabitEthernet1/0/1, changed
state to down 2